Hi,
In the middle of refurbishing the engine bay and came across the tired and ancient oil cooler and asked myself - given modern synthetic oil and a non A/C car do I really need the oil cooler? It’s probably already not working after 30 years anyway haha.
Should mention it’s a 325i automatic cab. Thoughts welcome.
O.S. In case deleting the cooler is a bad idea, was it NRF that was the OEM for the oil cooler?
Is the oil cooler really needed?
Moderator: martauto
I think the general consensus is it will be fine without it, Probably did not make that much difference even when new. Oils are light years away from the '80s now.
Only reason I would be putting it back is for show or originality
Only reason I would be putting it back is for show or originality
Ok. I’ll check if I can get a NRF.
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- Old Skooler
- Posts: 8024
- Joined: Sun Jan 09, 2005 11:00 pm
- Location: zummerzet
Can't say I think a standard M20 on the road running as it should, would overheat a modern oil. If you are using it on track then it may be sensible and a turbo needs good oil cooling but then you would be looking at something better than the standard cooler anyway.
E46 330i doesn't have an oil cooler, that is a lot harder on its oil than a 325i E30 and does just fine unless driven when broken when an oil cooler wouldn't save it anyway.
My 323i was pushing 325i power from new and never had a cooler and still had honing marks on the bores gone 110k. I don't remember the oil temp moving much no matter what type of driving I did.
Fresh oil changed regularly will be more benefit than any cooler.
But I would still say a 325i needs an oil cooler visible behind the slit in the front valance, otherwise it would have a blanking plate like 'lesser' models





Shell Helix 5/40 20 litres for £90
I can do all three cars once a year for this


https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/392175552890
Mart.
Only the E46 cab left now.
Just got too old.
Just got too old.
My opinion is that it depends on your driving style. In a cabriolet that you may just use for cruising and the odd excursion into higher rpms then most likely not
But if you like revving the engine out and leaving it at higher revs through corners, and also fast motorway speeds where you are in the 3.5k plus range then I would 100% leave it on
I purchased a brand new NRF one from autodoc for around £115 I believe. It came with bmw stamped on it
Also worth checking the thermostat assembly as mine needed a good clean
But if you like revving the engine out and leaving it at higher revs through corners, and also fast motorway speeds where you are in the 3.5k plus range then I would 100% leave it on
I purchased a brand new NRF one from autodoc for around £115 I believe. It came with bmw stamped on it
Also worth checking the thermostat assembly as mine needed a good clean
The NRF cooler is OoS on Autodoc unfortunately. So is all the others. I’m vapour blasting the whole thermostat assembly so hopefully that’ll do it.tha881 wrote: ↑Sun May 15, 2022 4:08 pmMy opinion is that it depends on your driving style. In a cabriolet that you may just use for cruising and the odd excursion into higher rpms then most likely not
But if you like revving the engine out and leaving it at higher revs through corners, and also fast motorway speeds where you are in the 3.5k plus range then I would 100% leave it on
I purchased a brand new NRF one from autodoc for around £115 I believe. It came with bmw stamped on it
Also worth checking the thermostat assembly as mine needed a good clean